A friend told me if i bury my resin ball about six inchs in the ground and leave it there all summer that it will make hash. Does anybody know if this works Before burying you wrap it aluminum foil and sran wrap so i's air tight.

Do you mean 'resin' as in a collection of smoking dregs scraped out of
a pipe or the dried remains of bong water cone? If that's the case the
answer is no, burying that will not make hash.

That sort of 'resin' I know as cruddy or crud (also a euphemism for
faecal matter). It's super high tar content makes it very damaging to
the epithelial lining of the lung and burying it in the ground for 3
months may well introduce a serious disease risk such as Legionella or
even Melioidosis, if you are in a tropical region.

I hope your friend was joking when s/he said this to you, otherwise s/he is spreading porkies that could seriously hurt someone.

Anything buried in topsoil will be inoculated with moulds and other
soil microbes and you seriously don't want to introduce these to your
lungs.

Hash is produced by removing the natural cannabis resins from the plant
material and compressing it. There are a number of methods that can
used and I am sure, seeing as you managed to find this folder, you will
be able to find information on hash production and I need not type it
all out here.

hey, i agree with SL. but its good to have a resin ball around when theres a pot drought in town.

but what ur buddy is unknowingly referring to is one of the ways them afghans make hash.They wrap their crystals and bud in goat skin and bury it maybe 4 to 6 feet underground. The sun cooks and the weight of the soil and rocks compresses.ive smoked my fair share of goat hair haha cant avoid it.

I would like to make some hash, with the ice-o-lator tehnique. The only problem is that, i don't have any screen at home. So, do you think that i can filter the solution with a simple tent linen? Sure i'd need some other type of linen too, but is it possible at all? The tents usually have 2 layers, and i think that those 2 layers would be just perfect. Do you think that the hole width in the outer layer would be small enough to filter the little resin parts?

Do you mean 'resin' as in a collection of smoking dregs scraped out of
a pipe or the dried remains of bong water cone? If that's the case the
answer is no, burying that will not make hash.

That sort of 'resin' I know as cruddy or crud (also a euphemism for
faecal matter). It's super high tar content makes it very damaging to
the epithelial lining of the lung and burying it in the ground for 3
months may well introduce a serious disease risk such as Legionella or
even Melioidosis, if you are in a tropical region.
...
Stay safe and remember, your lungs are worth more than a cruddy buzz.

sara lou

Ah yes, the old conflation of cannabis resin (good) and pipe residue (toxic waste). I wonder how many people in the parts of the world that see very little hash think hash is awful because they've only tried bong-scum.

SL is spot on.

Your friend may have been talking about burying real resin, which is part of some traditional hash-making processes. Some methods age the unpressed resin crystals for a year (though I think this is done above-ground, at least in Morocco), while others bury resin that has already been worked and pressed into proper hash.

It's debatable whether burying pressed resin is a method for aging/maturing hash, or whether it's just a way of storing surpluses from particularly bountiful years. When resin is worked into a single homogeneous mass of hashish, it generally forms a reasonably impermeable outer skin, and can then sit and age for a long time without going mouldy or losing potency. Not sure if burying worked hash will help this process.

Basically, if you have real resin glands sifted from plants, this is pretty close to hash already. The yellow/beige dust can be turned into single pliable black/brown mass in a number of ways. The higher the quality of the resin, the easier it is to turn into hash.

This method makes all sense in Afghanistan.Curing hashish needs very high temperature (37°) for at least a couple months.It also needs darkness and dry conditions.Under our latitudes, there are other ways to cure it properlyGreetz

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